
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXX: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE THIRTIETH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE HON. CAPTAIN COURTENAY BOYLE, R.N. COMMISSIONER OF THE TRANSPORT BOARD
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN JAMES MANDERSON, R.N.
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE WILLIAM TRUSCOTT, ESQ. BEAR-ADMIRAL OF THE WHITE
- ADDITIONAL BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR, OF ADMIRAL SIR ERASMUS GOWER, GIVEN IN THE FOURTH VOLUME OF THE NAVAL CHRONICLE, PAGE 257
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JAMES NEWMAN NEWMAN
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF LIEUT. WILLIAM ELLETSON KING, R.N.
- INDEX
PREFACE TO THE THIRTIETH VOLUME
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXX: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE THIRTIETH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE HON. CAPTAIN COURTENAY BOYLE, R.N. COMMISSIONER OF THE TRANSPORT BOARD
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN JAMES MANDERSON, R.N.
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE WILLIAM TRUSCOTT, ESQ. BEAR-ADMIRAL OF THE WHITE
- ADDITIONAL BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR, OF ADMIRAL SIR ERASMUS GOWER, GIVEN IN THE FOURTH VOLUME OF THE NAVAL CHRONICLE, PAGE 257
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JAMES NEWMAN NEWMAN
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF LIEUT. WILLIAM ELLETSON KING, R.N.
- INDEX
Summary
WE scarcely remember a night when that vast ocean, the public mind, appeared more agitated and rising into turbulent fluctuation, than in the evening of the 24th, when this our Thirtieth Preface was preparing to be sent on board. The Speech of Buonaparte to the Senate had arrived—it had been seen by many, yet read only by a few: the preliminaries of peace had been certainly signed; and Lord Castlereagh was that very night to embark in a frigate for the Continent, and to conclude the Pacification.
Now as the same false alarm may constantly happen during the great events which both by arms and by diplomacy are likely to take place; we think it right, on firing this our Thirtieth Gun, just to ascertain our bearings, and to inform our friends afloat, how the land lies: and this we are of opinion cannot be done more effectually, than by repeating the signal, which, when the day broke, we observed flying on board that vessel called The Times:—
“We cannot but highly applaud the resolution of the Cabinet, to send one of its own Members to the head quarters of the Allied Sovereigns, to enter into the most unreserved communication with them; and should there be any appearance of slackness in their councils, to animate them by that firm and consistent spirit of policy which, in the almost entire wreck of nations, left England in herself great and majestical, and to every other state, in its turn, a shield and a protection. […]
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- The Naval ChronicleContaining a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects, pp. v - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1813